PostgreSQL table versioning extension, recording row modifications and its history. The extension provides APIs for accessing snapshots of a table at certain revisions and the difference generated between any two given revisions. The extension uses a PL/PgSQL trigger based system to record and provide access to the row revisions.
Install pgxn-client which is hosted on PyPI:
$ sudo easy_install pgxnclient
Then do:
$ sudo pgxn install table_version
or sudo pgxn load -d my_db table_version
(Run pgxn --help for more info)
Add apt repository:
# Enable fetching packages from packagecloud
# production repository:
$ curl -s \
https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/linz/prod/script.deb.sh |
sudo bash
Then install the package (tweak the PGVER line if needed):
$ PGVER=$(basename `pg_config --sharedir`) \
sudo apt-get install postgresql-${PGVER}-tableversion
To build it, just do this:
make
make installcheck
make install
If you encounter an error such as:
"Makefile", line 8: Need an operator
You need to use GNU make, which may well be installed on your system as gmake
:
gmake
gmake install
gmake installcheck
If you encounter an error such as:
make: pg_config: Command not found
Be sure that you have pg_config
installed and in your path. If you used a package management
system such as RPM to install PostgreSQL, be sure that the -devel
package is also installed. If
necessary tell the build process where to find it:
env PG_CONFIG=/path/to/pg_config make && make installcheck && make install
And finally, if all that fails (and if you're on PostgreSQL 8.1 or lower, it likely will), copy the
entire distribution directory to the contrib/
subdirectory of the PostgreSQL source tree and try
it there without pg_config
:
env NO_PGXS=1 make && make installcheck && make install
If you encounter an error such as:
ERROR: must be owner of database regression
You need to run the test suite using a super user, such as the default "postgres" super user:
make installcheck PGUSER=postgres
Once table_version
is installed, you can add it to a database. If you're running PostgreSQL 9.1.0
or greater, it's a simple as connecting to a database as a super user and running:
CREATE EXTENSION table_version;
The extension will install support configuration tables and functions into the table_version
schema.
If you're ugrading from an older version of the extension run:
ALTER EXTENSION table_version UPDATE;
If you've upgraded your cluster to PostgreSQL 9.1 and already had table_version
installed, you can
upgrade it to a properly packaged extension with:
CREATE EXTENSION table_version FROM unpackaged;
As a facility, the table_version-loader
script can be used to both create (but not from
unpackaged) and upgrade the extension in an existing database. To use it run:
table_version-loader <dbname>
If it is not possible to install table_version
as an extension in your database cluster system you
can still use it by loading the support scripts in your database. The table_version-loader
script
can be used to make this easy, just run:
table_version-loader --no-extension <dbname>
Connection information (postgresql hostname, port, username, password) can all be set using standard environment variables PGHOST, PGPORT, PGUSER, PGPASSWORD.
The table_version
extension has no dependencies other than PL/PgSQL.
Installation and upgrade tests use Docker containers. See .github/workflows/test.yml
for how to
test various aspects.
This project is under 3-clause BSD License, except where otherwise specified. See the LICENSE file for more details.